Reports of air raids on the Kurdistan region’s mountains areas from south in Haabja to north in Duhok were posted at midnight. Close to twenty Turkish warplanes resumed bombed many regions in the Kurdistan region and Rojava, leaving 47 casualties.

Today, Sunday, Turkey announced Operation Claw-Sword against the PKK in the Kurdistan region and Rojava, an area that stretches over a thousand kilometers, in retaliation of the Istanbul blast that killed six people in an Istanbul thoroughfare. Ankara accused PKK for being behind the perpetrator, a woman who was captured following the attack.

“[it is to] retaliate for any treacherous attack on our country,” Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said while supervising the night operation.

Turkish warplanes bombed a forest and Meshtenur Hill near the city of Kobanê three times, injuring a journalist.

In today's air strikes on the Kurdistan Region, Turkey bombed the mountains of the villages of Endze, Zargali, Qalatukan, the slopes of Mount Assos and Mount Kurtaki in the Qandil mountains, and bombed the Garawan village in Akoyan Valley.

Meanwhile, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that Turkey carried out 28 attacks with 14 warplanes in Rojava, bombing residential areas in the center of Kobanê, Gree Spi, Derk, Shahba, Zrkan and Tel Rafaat, killing a journalist, nine Hezbollah fighters and six Syrian soldiers were killed and about 30 Syrian fighters, soldiers and civilians were wounded.

Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) spokesman Farhad Shami said NATO and the International Coalition against ISIS were tipped before Ankara’s extensive air campaign.

SDF Commander-in-Chief Mazloum Abdi said in a statement that at the Turkish attacks have nothing to do with the Istanbul bombing and that the bombing has been used as an excuse to “take revenge” on the Kurdish people.

Turkey has repeatedly threatened to invade parts of SDF-Kurdish controlled Rojava, citing security concerns that the SDF has denied.